WPF - World Photography Forum
Home Gallery Register FAQ Calendar Search Today's Posts Mark Forums Read

Welcome to World Photography Forum!
Welcome!

Thank you for finding your way to World Photography Forum, a dedicated community for photographers and enthusiasts. There's a variety of forums, a wonderful gallery, and what's more, we are absolutely FREE. You are very welcome to join, take part in the discussion, and post your pictures!

Click here to go to the forums home page and find out more.
Click here to join.


Go Back   World Photography Forum > Off Topic > Computers and The Internet


Computers and The Internet This is the place to ask questions and discuss the complex world of computer and internet issues.

Basic CRT or half decent LCD?

Reply
 
Thread Tools
  #11  
Old 06-05-07, 20:53
Canis Vulpes's Avatar
Canis Vulpes Canis Vulpes is offline  
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: United Kingdom
Age: 51
Posts: 4,398
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Zeb View Post
Hey I just thought...

Is there anything stopping you from using CRT and LCD?

Quite a few graphics cards allow you to connect more than one monitor at a time to one PC.

I'm suggesting this because LCD monitors are "eye friendly" as they don't cycle the display like CRT monitors do. Many offices and other such work places move to LCD because very few people get headaches while using them like they do with CRT monitors. PAL systems run at 60Hz which also happens to be the same frequency of the human body - the two clash.

If you mostly use your computer for graphics and not much else then stay with just a CRT. If you use your computer for lots of other things as well then it's worth a thought...
Allow me to correct a few inconsistencies.

PAL employs a 50Hz scanning frequency and the human eye is fooled in to believing motion by more than 25 still images per second. PAL uses two fields to make one frame hence 50Hz (25 images). CRT monitors have been scanning greater than 50Hz for years and years.
Reply With Quote
  #12  
Old 06-05-07, 23:39
Zeb's Avatar
Zeb Zeb is offline  
Member
 
Join Date: May 2007
Location: Devon, UK
Age: 50
Posts: 91
Default

Ouch! Silly me - I meant to say 50Hz

After all the years programming for 50Hz and 60Hz systems and video editing I can't believe I made that mistake!

Thanks for pointing that out!
__________________
Olympus C350-Zoom || Canon EOS 300D || Adobe Photoshop CS3 || Manfrotto tripod || Photomatix Pro
Reply With Quote
  #13  
Old 07-05-07, 10:47
Tannin's Avatar
Tannin Tannin is offline  
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: Ballarat, Australia
Posts: 288
Default

The days when a good CRT outperformed a good LCD are gone, dead and buried.

First, it's just about impossible to buy a good CRT anymore. One by one, all the top-class CRT manufacturers have bailed out of the industry. So you will almost certainly have to go second-hand - and accept that you will be getting an old, possibly rather tired monitor, with poor prospects for repair should it need that anytime soon - spare parts for CRTs are also hard to get.

Second, TFT screens have come of age. Good ones are really good these days.

But note well: cheap, games-oriented TFT screens are hopeless for photographic work. If you go TFT, you need one that is designed for doing real work on, not some jumped-up games console display with rapid refresh and lousy colour.

Types of TFT

Twisted Nematic Film is the common sort. It's reasonably cheap to manufacture, easy to make fast for games and movies, and has good contrast if it's done right. But it has bad viewing angle problems and (in most cases) cannot display 24-bit colour. You can put 24-bit colour in, but the monitor electronics clip the 8 bits per channel down to 6 bits. Worse, it has linearity problems - i.e., as well as having a smaller number of colours, it switches between them in an undesirable way. Bottom line: don't do photographic work on a TN/F screen.

S-IPS. Super In Plane Switching panels have much better colour accuracy, and are viewable at a much wider range of angles. They are slow (which doesn't mater if you are not into games) and have poor contrast. They are also significantly more expensive to manufacture. There are several variations on S-IPS which apparently deliver much better contrast and are thus well-suited to photographic work.

MVA and S-PVA. There are so many MVA variants marketed that it is hard to keep track of what is what. The original MVA was decently fast, had good viewing angles, and good contrast, but poor brightness and colour. Newer developments of MVA are apparently much better in those respects. Samsung's S-PVA is a variation on the MVA theme, which provides excellent colour, contrast, and viewing angles, with decent speed as well.
Reply With Quote
  #14  
Old 07-05-07, 11:11
Tannin's Avatar
Tannin Tannin is offline  
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: Ballarat, Australia
Posts: 288
Default

Which TFT screen should you get?

For the fine detail, you will have to make up your own mind. But so far as the big picture goes, it's easy. Do not even think about any of the popular TF+N screens. They are, for photographic purposes, pretty much useless. Better to keep your old CRT than go down that road. If you are going TFT, get something decent.

I have not used any of the modern S-IPS panels, so I can't comment from my own experience, but from my reading I'd say that you would probably do just fine with one.

I have used Samsung's magnificent S-PVA panels, and the day I got my first one of those was the day I stopped using my CRTs for photographic work - and it wasn't as if I had cheap and crappy CRTs, I was running an excellent old Hitachi 19 inch and a simply wonderful, top-of-the-range Mitsubishi 22: at the time, pretty much the best readily available monitor money could buy.

The Samsung 214T was AU$1200 - a lot of money considering that a typical reasonable quality 19 inch TFT was around $380. I ordered it on spec, sight unseen, as much in hope as in expectation. 24 hours later I picked up the phone and ordered another one - it was that good. I couldn't bear swapping back to lesser screens after using the 214T, not even the Mitsubishi 22. (Oh, and the 214T has pretty reasonable ex-factory settings. I have calibrated mine, but the factory default colour settings aren't atually all that far out - much better than most screens. I now own three Samsung S-PVA screens. I added the smaller 19 inch brother of the 214T to go in the showroom. Unfortunately, people see it there, admire the picture quality, and wind up buying it. I keep replacing it.

I'm sure that there are other good TFT screens around, but they are hard to find in this gadget-riden, throwaway world, and nearly everything you will see in the shops will be yet another crappy TN Film screen. You have to look hard, ask questions, and be prepared to pay for quality.

Prices. No point quoting you Australian prices. Even if you do the currency conversion, prices change all the time and your market may be different anyway. But I can do it this way: let's say a typical "good quality" 19 inch TF N screen costs 100 clamshells. A cheap one will be around 70 or 80 clamshells. And the Samsung 19 inch S-PVA will be around 140 clamshells. The 214T will be about 300 clamshells. I imagine that the prices of the S-IPS screens will be about the same as the S-PVA, probably a bit more, but I'm only guessing.

One more thing. Viewing angle matter. Matters a lot. You see, with a monitor that doesn't have excellent viewing angle technology, every time you move your head the tiniest little bit, the colours change. You just can't tell if your picture is too bright, too dark, or what. You end up guessing all the time, which just isn't good enough.
Reply With Quote
  #15  
Old 07-05-07, 11:30
Tannin's Avatar
Tannin Tannin is offline  
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: Ballarat, Australia
Posts: 288
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Zeb View Post
Hey I just thought...

Is there anything stopping you from using CRT and LCD?
Yes. In most cases, you can output to two diferent screens no worries, but a lot of video cards are unable to output at two different frequencies at the same time. This means you have to run your CRT at 60hz, which looks terrible! (Your particular video card may be different, but it is essential to check this before you buy.)

Quote:
Originally Posted by Zeb View Post

I'm suggesting this because LCD monitors are "eye friendly" as they don't cycle the display like CRT monitors do. Many offices and other such work places move to LCD because very few people get headaches while using them like they do with CRT monitors. PAL systems run at 60Hz which also happens to be the same frequency of the human body - the two clash.
Nope. Not even close. PAL is TV, nothing to do with monitors. Same with NTSC: TV technology, and very old TV technology at that.

CRT computer monitors - pretty much anything made since IBM introduced the first VGA screen in 1987 - can run at any of a wide range of frequencies. A properly adjusted monitor runs at 85hz or better. The rule-of-thumb is to adjust your refresh frequency up until it looks good, then go up a bit more till it starts getting fuzzy or weak, then go back a step or two.

You need about 85hz on a CRT to avoid flicker. In most cases, there is little or no point in going beyond that - it just stresses the electronics harder for no tangible benefit. CRT screens, remember, actually only have one pixel lit at any single instant. The illusion of a well-lit, even screen is created by a combination of phosphor latency (the glowing dot takes a while to fade) and the human eye (past 85hz or so we can't see the flicker, so it effectively ceases to exist, so far as humans are concerned).

Running a CRT at 60hz produces a very stressful, flickery picture. Many (most?) video cards default to 60hz or 72hz or even an eye-destroying 50hz because these very slow refresh frequencies are the only ones certain to work on any monitor, even a very old, cheap one. But all modern video cards (since about 1985) allow you to adjust the refresh rate, and that is the first thing you should do after you pug a monitor in and adjust the display resolution.

TFT screens work a completely different way. Essentially, each dot on a TFT screen is switched to a particular brightness level and then stays there until further notice: it doesn't pulse the way dots on a CRT do. No flicker. So refresh frequency for TFT screens is a non-issue. Most default to 60hz, which is fine. But they could be 160hz and wouldn't look any different, or 0.6hz and the only difference would be very slow screen redraws.
Reply With Quote
  #16  
Old 07-05-07, 12:24
Roy C's Avatar
Roy C Roy C is offline  
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: Barnstaple, North Devon
Posts: 2,543
Default

Good stuff Tannin and thanks - the technicalities are a bit above me but it looks as if there are good TFT's out there if you know what you are looking for. The Samsung SyncMaster 214T goes for around 500 GBP in the uk so I am going to see if my local PC world has any to take a look at. I am still working on a old (but still very good) 17" CRT, Gateway VX700 which I believe is a Sony engine but would like something bigger.

Cheers and thanks again
Roy C
__________________
Roy

MY WEB SITE
MY PHOTOSTREAM
Reply With Quote
  #17  
Old 07-05-07, 13:30
nirofo's Avatar
nirofo nirofo is offline  
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: North Scotland
Posts: 798
Default

Is a Dell M993s CRT better for general graphics than a mediocre LCD, definately yes, no comparison!!! See here for full spec and reviews. http://www.retrevo.com/search?q=Dell...=review+manual


Model number M993s CRT (19")

Screen dimensions

Preset Image Size
(This is the Dell-recommended viewing image)Diagonal 17.32 inches(440 mm)
Horizontal 13.86 0.16 inches(352 4 mm)
Vertical 10.39 0.16 inches(264 4 mm)Viewable Image Size (VIS)
(This is the maximum viewable image) Diagonal 18.00 inches(457.2mm) Max
Horizontal 14.37 inches(365 mm)
Vertical 10.79 inches(274 mm)Dot Pitch0.236 mm Deflection angle90° Phosphor typeP22 (R,G,B, medium short persistence)Faceplate coatingAnti-static/anti-glare non-diffusing, multi-layer coating, high gloss value (spin coating)Resolution

Horizontal scan range30 kHz to 96 kHz (automatic)Vertical scan range50 Hz to 160 Hz (automatic)Optimal preset resolution1280 x 1024 at 75 HzHighest preset resolution1600 x 1200 at 75 HzHighest addressable resolution1600 x 1200 at 75 Hzhttp://support.dell.com/support/edoc...phics/note.gifNOTE: Dell does not guarantee image performance on non-preset video modes.http://support.dell.com/support/edoc...phics/note.gifNOTE: Dell guarantees image size and centering for all preset modes listed in the following table.Supported Resolutions

Display ModeHorizontal
Frequency (kHz)Vertical
Frequency (Hz)Pixel Clock
(MHz)Sync Polarity
(Horizontal / Vertical)IBM®, VGA2, 720 x 40031.46970.08728.322-/+IBM, VGA3, 640 x 48031.46959.94025.175-/-VESA, 640 x 48043.26985.08036.000-/-VESA, 800 x 60053.67485.06156.250+/+VESA, 1024 x 76868.67784.99794.500+/+VESA, 1280 x 102479.97675.000135.00+/+VESA, 1280 x 102491.1585.000157.50+/+VESA, 1600 x 120093.75075.000202.50+/+


nirofo.

Last edited by nirofo; 07-05-07 at 13:40.
Reply With Quote
  #18  
Old 07-05-07, 13:53
yelvertoft's Avatar
yelvertoft yelvertoft is offline  
Guest
 
Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: North Essex, UK
Age: 59
Posts: 8,486
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by nirofo View Post
Is a Dell M993s CRT better for general graphics than a mediocre LCD, definately yes, no comparison!!! See here for full spec and reviews. http://www.retrevo.com/search?q=Dell...=review+manual



nirofo.
Thanks, I'd found the specs for my current monitor, and know that it's better than a cheap consumer LCD panel. I'm trying to gauge if it's any better than a TFT designed for photo editing such as the NEC 1990SXi, this is a S-IPS panel. Detailed spec here:
http://www.nec-display-solutions.co....6174,group=all
Paste below

MultiSync® LCD1990SXi
Price: £379.00*
*suggested street price (price excluding VAT)

1990SXi-MonitorViewFrontalBlack: 16.5 kb
1990SXi-MonitorViewLeftBlack-Face: 27.6 kb
1990SXi-MonitorViewRightBlack: 16.2 kb
A new 90s range high-end 19 inch professional display as an entry level model for the CAD/CAM, DTP, financial market and medical sectors.

Colour Versions

* Silver Front Bezel, Light Grey Back Cabinet
* Black Front Bezel, Black Back Cabinet



Main Main
Details Details
Downloads Downloads
Certificates Certificates
Specials Specials
Media Media
Details
Panel Technology S-IPS TFT
Screen Size [inch/cm] 19.0 / 48.2
Pixel Pitch [mm] 0.294
Viewing Angle 178° horizontal / 178° vertical (typ. at contrast ratio 10:1)
Contrast Ratio (typ.) 600:1
Brightness (typ.) [cd/m²] 270
Response Time (typ.) [ms] 9 (grey-to-grey), 18 (11 white / black; 7 black / white)
Colours [Mio.] 16.77
Horizontal Frequency [kHz] 31.5 - 81.1
Vertical Frequency [Hz] 50.0 - 85.0
Optimum Resolution 1280 x 1024 at 60 Hz
Other Resolutions 1280 x 960; 1152 x 870; 1152 x 864; 1024 x 768; 832 x 624; 800 x 600; 720 x 400; 640 x 480
Connectors Digital: x DVI-D; Digital/ Analog: 1 x DVI-I; Analog: 1 x D-sub 15 pin
Plug & Play VESA DDC/CI; DDC2B/2Bi; EDID Standard
Adjust Functions Advanced NTAA (Advanced Non-Touch-Auto-Adjustment); Advanced User Menu; Auto Adjust; Black Level; Brightness; Colour Temperature Control; Contrast; Expansion Mode; Fine Adjust (analogue); Hotkeys; Intelligent Power Management; Language Select; Monitor Information; OmniColor™: sRGB and 6-axis-colour-control; On-Screen-Manager (OSM) lock-out; Sharpness; User Menu
Safety and Ergonomics CE; TCO'03; TÜV ergonomics approved; TÜV GS; C-tick; GEEA/Energy Label; Energy Star; FCC Class B; PCT/Gost; UL/C-UL or CSA; CCC; ISO 13406-2 (pixel failure class II); MPR II/ MPR III; PCBC/B-mark; PSB; RoHS
Power Requirements on Mode [W] 46 (max.)
Power Requirements Power-saving Mode [W] 1
Power Supply 100-120 V/220-240 V; 0.63 A/0.27 A; integrated power supply
Ambient Temperature (operating) [°C] +5 to +35
Ambient Humidity (operating) [%] 30 to 80
VESA Mounting [mm] 100 x 100
ErgoDesign®: Height Adjustable Stand [mm] 150
Dimensions (W x H x D) [mm] 402.3 x 410.7 - 560.7 x 247.3 (Landscape mode)
Screen Tilt [°] -5 to +30
Swivel [°] -170 to +170
Bezel Width [mm] 12 (left and right)
Cable Management yes
Kensington Lock yes
Weight [kg] 9.0
Specials Adjustable power LED (colour and brightness); Advanced NTAA (Advanced Non-Touch- Auto-Adjustment); AmbiBright; ambix³™; Auto Black Level; Auto Brightness; Auto Contrast; AutoBright Technology; CableComp with Sync Continuity Detection; ColorComp; DDC-CI; Direct brightness and contrast; EcoModes; GammaComp (12-bit look up table) and 12- bit gamma correction; L-shape Front Button Technology; NaViSet® and NaViSet® Administrator compatible; OmniColor™; Overdrive; Quick release stand and handle; Rapid Response Technology; RapidMotion; Realtime clock with scheduler (Power-On and Power-Off timer); Self diagnostics; TileMatrix and TileComp; TORO™ Design
Audio Functions Option: MultiSync® Soundbar 90
Colour Versions Silver Front Bezel, Light Grey Back Cabinet; Black Front Bezel, Black Back Cabinet
Shipping Content Monitor; Power Cable; Signal Cable DVI-A - VGA, DVI-D - DVI-D; CD-ROM; Sales Office List; Manual
Warranty 3 years warranty including backlight

Thanks Tony and Nirofo for the pointers.

Duncan
Reply With Quote
Reply


Currently Active Users Viewing This Thread: 1 (0 members and 1 guests)
 
Thread Tools

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is Off
HTML code is Off
Forum Jump


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 12:07.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.7.3
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.